Archive for the 'Local Search' Category

It seems Google has updated its guidelines for businesses listing in Local Business Centre (which gets you on Google Maps/Local Search). You can see the new guidelines here.

The most important of the changes pertains to your Business Name: “The business name on Google Maps must be your full legal business name.” That poses problems for businesses who are “trading as”, with an often unconnected/irrelevant actual registered company name.

Why is Google hot on this? Well, keywords in the business name is a strong element of its ranking algorithm, so it’s been common for “mapspam” to use keyword-stuffed business names to rank highly.

Other changes include not being able to use a PO Box as your address, which may reduce the number of listings for businesses who don’t have a physical location in a particular town and the suggestion (but not requirement) to use the same domain name as your website for your listed email address. Hopefully most people reading this will be doing the last one as a matter of course!

I had an interesting email today from Parcel2Go.com, who I use occasionally to send bits of cars around the country. It seems that they’re getting into buying links in an interesting way! I wonder what Google makes of this?

A bit of investigation using a whois service like Domain Tools shows that the website is hosted in Oslo!

Why is this important? Well, Google’s search results are biased according to the country in which the search is being performed. This is because it knows that most searchers are looking for something local to them. Google uses lots of information to decide whether a site is in the same country as the searcher: the domain extension (e.g. .co.uk), the postal address on the site (if it can find one), the geographic-targeting setting in Webmaster Tools, links from local websites and quite possibly numerous other factors.

One other factor is the physical location of the web server, i.e. if it is hosted in the same country. Clearly, in Kent Guitar Classics’ case, it isn’t – it’s hosted in Norway. As a result, one of the big pointers Google uses to determine a site’s country of origin is way off. Naturally, I have advised Miles at Kent Guitar Classics to move server.

An interesting aside I noticed while researching the site’s setup is that for some reason, the deafult homepage for www.kentguitarclassics.com is index.html, but the homepage appears to be index.asp. This could be another problem for Google, as it doesn’t like “bounce”-type redirects. A quick disabling of Javascript and meta refresh tags using the excellent Web Developer Toolbar for Firefox means that I can see this page:

Kent Guitar Classics redirect page - click to enlarge

Examine the code, and there is a Javascript redirect to index.asp – not something that Google will take particularly kindly to. This could be because the developer originally used index.html and when the change to index.asp was made, they didn’t want to break peoples’ bookmarks, so they used a redirect to ensure everyone still got the homepage.

This is one of the problems with Windows web servers running Internet Information Server (IIS) – there isn’t an easy way to create permanent (301) redirects, because the .htaccess files used by Apache (the usual web server on Linux machines) mean nothing to IIS. Instead, you either have to code the redirect into the page using ASP, or make changes directly in IIS (or install an ISAPI filter), which on anything but a dedicated server, the host won’t let you near.

That’s a completely separate problem to the physical location of the server, but I thought I’d mention it whilst looking at that site!